Fannie and Freddie both reported declines in the most severe category of delinquency, but Ginnie's rate was slightly higher in October. (Includes data chart.)
Fannie and Freddie reported strong gains in net income during the third quarter, and the ongoing mortgage-market boom pumped up their retained mortgage holdings. (Includes data chart.)
Production levels surged for agency 1-4-family MBS, non-mortgage ABS and commercial MBS from the second to the third quarter. Nonbanks continued to dominate the agency market. Includes three data charts.)
Fannie Mae’s credit-risk transfer loan-level data show 21.0% of borrowers that were in forbearance in June exited when their relief plans expired in July. That works out to 1.7% of the government-sponsored enterprise’s outstandings.
Fannie and Freddie recorded a huge increase in single-family MBS during the second quarter, capturing a huge share of the growing conventional-conforming loan market. (Includes data chart.)
At least some of the advantage enjoyed by the Treasury market over agency MBS can be attributed to structural differences in the two markets and how they evolved, according to Federal Reserve economists.
Not surprisingly, mortgages on retail and lodging properties were hit the hardest in the economic fallout of the coronavirus. Agency multifamily MBS issuance rose significantly in the second quarter. (Includes data chart.)